Review: Apple’s New MacBook Pro (Somebody Get My Gun!)

There are things I absolutely love about my new 15″ Apple MacBook Pro (photo above courtesy of Apple), but at least 40 to 50 times a day, I want to have a friend fling it high into the air so I can use it for skeet shooting practice.
Now, before I dig into this review too far, part of the problem seems to be an Apple thing, but part of the problem may be something Adobe can fix in Photoshop CS4, because it’s there where the problem is most prevalent, and it’s there where I find myself stringing together somewhat colorful phrases I would not normally assemble.
My Worry
My main concern about the MacBook Pro was that the glossy glass screen would be too glossy for accurately editing photos in Photoshop.
My First Impression
I was pleasantly surprised at how great photos look on its crisp glossy screen. In fact, it’s so luscious, I think it makes the photos look better than they really look. Also, I was concerned about reflections, and while it is more reflective, and I keep thinking that’s going to be a problem; so far, it really hasn’t been. Surprisingly, the only time I really notice the reflections is when it dims the screen. Then, I’m much more aware of them.
The Reality
I’m still worried. Because it makes photos look so darn good, I only want people to see my photos on a glossy MacBook Pro glass screen, but of course, that’s not going to happen, as they’ll be viewed on the Web on whatever computer they have, and of course, they’ll be viewed in print. I’ve only had my MacBook Pro a few days, so I haven’t had a chance to do any serious printing in-house on my Epsons, and just last night I sent my first lab print to MPIX.com, so I have no idea how my on-screen color correction and edits will relate to my final images in print or on the Web. So, while I’m pleasantly surprised at how nice the screen looks, I’ll have to wait and see how the Photoshop editing process plays out. I will update you on this as soon as I know.
—-
My Worry
I know that one of the key features in Photoshop CS4 is the new hardware accelerated graphics and that now Photoshop hands off a lot of processing directly to the graphics card, and while I could see a difference in my old MacBook Pro, I was wondering if the new NVIDIA graphics card in the new MacBook Pros would really make that big a difference.
My First Impression
It’s way better than I expected. So much so, that it actually changes your Photoshop experience. I’ve never felt like Photoshop has moved faster than it does with the new NVIDIA cards. It’s crazy fast, and zooming, moving, rotating views, etc. is just amazingly, crazily, wonderfully fast.
The Reality
My first impression was correct. So much so, that I’m going to install an NVIDIA graphics card in my MacPro tower at home, which is the machine I do most of my serious photo work on.
—-
My Worry
Since the new MacBook Pros don’t come with a mouse button, I was afraid it would be weird not having something to click, and it would take me a long time to get used to it. Instead, the whole trackpad is a mouse button (well, most of it anyway), so wherever you are, you can just click.
My First Impression
Wow, you don’t really need a mouse button. I started working with it immediately, because your hand sits right where it always did, and when you want to click, you just click with your thumb like you always did. After five minutes, you don’t even think about it again.
The Reality
I was wrong. The trackpad is killing me, and is the main culprit behind all my MacBook Pro Pain. Apple will have to fix part of it (and if the reports I’m reading online are correct, they’ve already begun a fix), but Adobe will probably have to fix the other part.
The problem is a combination of the new trackpad finger gestures, which let you control navigation and rotation within Photoshop much in the way you work with photos on an iPhone (you can flick images around, you can pinch to zoom in, etc.. It’s actually a very cool intuitive idea). Here’s the problem; my thumb rests on the trackpad where it always rests—right where the click button used to be. But if it moves upward even 1/16 of a inch (which it often does), then the trackpad thinks I want to rotate the canvas view in Photoshop, and so it turns my canvas to a 45° angle. Sometimes, it just starts tilting my canvas back and forth while I’m trying to work. Sometimes it not only rotates my canvas, it zooms me out to less than a 1% view of my image. So, 40 to 50 times a day (maybe more), I have to go and reset my Canvas to normal, and then zoom back out to fit in view. It is driving me crazy to the point that I now find myself making finger gestures to my new Mac.
I went to the Trackpad preferences, hoping there was a way to turn off the “rotate my screen wildly and zoom in and out at random” feature, but sadly, there was not (see the capture below).

I’ve pretty much turned off whatever I can in the preferences above, and yet, still I rotate. Here’s a quick video of how this affects my day.
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/qOFNCB_u_aY" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]
Now, this problem happens to a lesser extent in my Web Browser and in my Mac Mail application, where suddenly my text zooms in, or gets really tiny. It doesn’t bother me as much there, but that’s probably because it doesn’t rotate my view, eh?
Other problems with the trackpad are:
- The cursor seems to vanish sometimes. Not all that often—just sometimes
- If your thumb doesn’t hit the right place, it kind of ignores you, and this drives me crazy when editing text. I keep clicking my cursor on the spot where I want to edit, but it won’t move. So, I often click somewhere near where I want to edit, and then use the back-arrow key to get back to the text I want to edit. Arrrgggg.
- Every so often, it kind of freezes, or pauses, and you can’t do anything.
There are forums full of people will similar problems, and apparently Apple is already working on a fix for this. Now, here’s what I need Adobe to do; I need a preference to turn “Rotate View” off. (note: It just froze again, and I had to move the cursor using the arrow key to type this next line). If I could turn the feature off, then at least that problem would go away.
It’s not really Adobe’s fault that they didn’t anticipate that a computer that was not yet released would turn a very cool new feature into a nightmare, but at this point, that preference will help a lot, but it won’t help with the zooming issue.
—-My Worry
Apple won’t fix this fast enough to keep me from tossing my new MacBook Pro (whose otherwise design, fantastic keyboard, and other features I dearly love), from the top of someplace very high.
My First Impression
Apple usually makes things right. I actually have great faith in Apple fixing this quickly, because they are known far and wide for their excellent customer service and customer satisfaction
The Reality
I’ll just have to wait and see. However, this isn’t the end of the story—I will update you on when the fix is in, how the new glossy screen plays out, and any other developments, but for now, I thought I’d better share my experience.
If you’re having similar experiences with CS4 and your new MacBook Pro, please let me know, because if it’s “just me,” and my own poor trackpad skills, then I want to amend this review.


















>What matters are the numbers. That is the only thing that will always be completely accurate and true. So to me, the glossy screen doesn’t matter for my color correction.
The numbers for WHAT output device? While editing, you’re in a well behaved RGB working space. So you know the numbers for the eventual output to all possible printers? What we do know is that in well behaved RGB working spaces, R=G=B is neutral, zero is the black hole, white is as white as you get. Other than that, all the numbers are ambiguous in terms of the final output. Only a profile for each device can provide the numbers (and they don’t tell you they are “correct”.
The display is critical!
As to the question: “I thought people calibrated their screens for photo work, exactly so that the image on their screen is transferable to other screens without worrying how it will look.”
That IS the idea, but in reality, there’s a big difference between the 15″ display on the MacBook and say a high end, NEC SpectraView. There’s a difference in color gamut and contrast ratio (lower is actually better for us). Calibration of the laptop helps and is necessary but I’d never do color critical work on such a display. Even the viewing angle of such a “low end” display can’t compare to a display that can often cost as much as the entire laptop.
White LED back light displays are also very problematic as most current Colorimeters are not built with filtration to deal with the effectively.
Scott,
Thanks for letting me know I’m not alone in the universe. After spending a great deal of time with a new Macbook and it’s trackpad I’ve decided to stay away for the moment. Still happy with my old Pro, so for the moment I’ll stick with it.
Also, as a guy with several “old” Firewire 400 drives I’m bummed out about that port being phased out. Ah well, time for me to upgrade I suppose.
All the other improvements are great and I want them. Guess I’ll have to adapt at some point…..
Scott,
Thanks for the post. I read it yesterday and then received my brand spanking new MacBook Pro. I was prepared for the track pad stuff and changed the way I place my hand. It has been very successful so far.
I love (let me emphasize *LOVE*) my new MacBook Pro.
Thanks for your wonderful posts!
JAJ
Scott,
I don’t see how you could do photo editing with any trackpad! They are ultimately useless. What you need is a Logitech Nano VX wireless laptop mouse – it will rock your laptop world.
Not sure why some people are so anti-trackpads and say they are useless for PS work. I used to carry a small wacom tablet for working on location, but as I so rarely used it, I stopped bothering. A well set up track [i.e. not the default] is very nice to use, even when doing PS.
I’ve had a play with the new trackpad in the store and loved it [after some tweaking], mind you I don’t leave my thumb on bottom of pad, as Scott says he does.
I do hate the screen however. Look at a low key image or a website with reverse text and all you see is yourself. I have a laptop with a far less glossy screen and it drives me nuts having to adjust to minimise reflections and it also means screen is rarely in position I find most comfortable.
Unlike many posters above, I prefer trackpads to mice as mice are always too small and are ideal for causing RSI, not to mention finding a left handed one is really tricky. I use the Wacom tablet with right hand [when I haven't lost pen!!] to spread the load beteween left and right hands to reduce strain.
But I get no RSI problems when using trackpad.
Scott, your experiences with the touchpad match mine exactly. I’m constantly bugged by the touchpad interpreting my finger and thumb as a zoom gesture, and having it change my font sizes in Safari.
As a fix, try downloading the MultiClutch preference pane: http://wcrawford.org/2008/02/28/everytime-i-think-about-you-i-touch-my-cell/
Add the rotate gestures and set them to an innocuous keyboard shortcut for Photoshop. Hopefully that will ease your frustrations.
Good review. I had the same problem wrt to the trackpad, but I found that if I turn off actual clicking and use ONLY tap that the problem goes away. Yeah, it feels a little bit different, but my thumb actually doesn’t rest on the trackpad at all anymore. It’s strictly my index and middle finger and then I use taps for click and dragging. I actually like it much better now. Anyhow, just a thought.
what kind of photo work do you do? photos of photoshop?
what surprises me the most is that you use the trackpad when working in Photoshop. As for the 1/16th if an inch problem. Isn’t that just a matter if getting used to?
i can understand the need for doing quick touch ups or something on a notebooks trackpad. But seeing that you say it has been anoying you constantly i’m guessing you dont have a mouse. i’m sure you are usually using the desktop but as many others have suggested. get a mouse. for my mouse, i use the logitech vx nano. its got a usb adaptor that sticks out only 8mm and its a five button mouse with side scrolling. the downside is that every once and a while it will not register a click or something. my friend had more problems on his macbook pro vs. my macbook. i think due to the higher amount of emi shielding in the macbook pro between the adapter (left side usb) and the mouse on the right side. or else a bluetooth mouse. said friend loves his microsoft bluetooth mouse. i personally cant stand the mighty mouse, and my buddy also ditched his mighty mouse on his imac in favor of a microsoft mouse.
i just cant see how a professional editor for a photoshop magazine of all things could stand to use photoshop without a mouse.
If you’re G5 doesnt have pci express then i would say it is obsolete for your profession. The wiki on the G5 says that some of the later models did have it. Also be sure to check out the offerings from ATi as they have some fantastic cards as well. nvidia has usually put out better notebook graphics and thus apple has typically gone with them. but it doesnt mean you should limit yourself to nvidia.
and i have had a glossy screen for a long time now that looks lovely. and plenty of people out there with their HPs, Gateways, and so on have glossy screens as well that look just as good as the macbook pro’s.
i agree with Jai in that glossy screens make it harder to calibrate the monitor, and do some finer edits. sure it looks great for viewing, but if its being used as a tool, and not an entertainment device, the matte should be an option as well.
and whats with the fools out there saying that buying a new macbook pro is early adopting. the macbook pro is not first generation. it has new technology, but most are considered updates from the last model in order to stay competitive in the notebook market.
and lastly, apple does not necessarily have excellent customer service. my poor girlfriends mom had to wait for half an hour later than expected while the “genius” flirted with two blonde bimbos till she got worked up enough to ask the guy to do his job. and apple does not necessarily give their users what they want. first gen iphones didnt have copy paste, or the ability to send picture messages. two of the bigger complaints out there… the second gen still cannot do either.
i wonder if a little piece of tape where your thumb rests on the track pad would provide a dead zone ? I would look for something that doesn’t really have sticky stuff… like those clear decals that stick to glass to avoid the ick mess. Course I don’t know if it works. But i would think i would with the right insulator. Then if it does work you can add a cool picture or design and start selling them… now what to name this great new product… thumb guard or green thumb or bat thumb or all thumbs or no thumb… or apple worm…just share the profits with me please.
Is it possible the issues in Photoshop are more Photoshop’s fault than the MacBook’s? I haven’t used CS4 yet, but obviously CS4 has to have some coding to allow the trackpad gestures to work inside of it, so there must be a way to disable them in CS4? At least that is my assumption…
yes, seriously – buy a mouse -> pain is over.
if you edit photos on a 15″ screen and the touchpad sucks, sorry.. you should use a bigger screen anyway – so why not also just get a nice mouse.
i understand your pain – apple delivered you a system that works perfectly but the interface just sucks. but the be honest – even if i just check my mails on my tiny eeepc on the road/train/airplane, i use a tiny wireless laptop mouse. (logitec RX mobile that is).
This is why the Trackpad gestures are still closed API. Developers should not use them yet.
The gestures and the trackpad hardware are obviously still in development, it’s always better to only start providing these capabilities to third parties when you can make sure they know what they’re doing.
Adobe obviously didn’t. But used it anyways.
Yeah, you can toss it out from a window OR you can get a nice logitech / microsoft / razer bluetooth mouse for it. (Should you pick the first solution, drop me a note so i’ll go there and try to catch it
)
You can also try to put some electrical insolation tape over the bottom edge of the trackpad, so it can’t track the finger, but is still clikable (don’t know if it will work, the idea just came to me right now)
Unbelievable how the Mac fans automatically go to the defense and tell you not to use the trackpad…
How do they think it is logical to buy a laptop that comes with a trackpad yet not being able to use it?
The first Macbook Pro I got last week was defective. One of the internal fans kept rattling so I took it back.
What annoys me the the most is lack of fw400, trackpad, and glossy screen.
This morning with the windows behind me, I can hardly read the screen without jacking up the brightness. The batter life seems worse than the last generation, but I don’t have evidence to back this up.
Why do you continue to use your thumb for clicking? The whole thing’s a trackpad for a reason. Move the cursor with your finger, then just press down with the same finger. It’s that simple.
For what its worth,
I’ve had my new Macbook Pro for about a week now. I love the trackpad. I’ve not used it in CS4 yet (its still being shipped to me) but I don’t experience any mis-gestures in anything else. I think the key difference for me is that I don’t use my thumb on it at all. I just use my forefinger and middle finger.
I think most the problems come from people resting their thumbs on the trackpad.
I’m hopeful that Apple will get the software fixed for you very soon!
Nice R! I myself have a 2007 TI R. I don’t know if this is just some ad work your doing, or a personal project, but the picture looks great.
I just made my first switch to Apple 2 wks ago with the new MBP. Beautiful computer but I think it isnt perfect. I agree this new trackpad is a PITA. Frequently, my cursor disappears or will not even respond. The right click function is also finnicky and tough to manage. The right click menu pops up and then goes away quickly, or it doesnt even come up and loads a link in question in your current browser window. If they are coming out with a fix it will be more than welcome!
Otherwise this thing makes Windows XP/VIsta look like 1980’s Jaguar. OSX is so fast and stable, I am not very worried with anything crashing.
I’ve been having the same problems and it’s good to know that these issues weren’t just in my head…
“Unlike many posters above, I prefer trackpads to mice as mice are always too small and are ideal for causing RSI, not to mention finding a left handed one is really tricky. I use the Wacom tablet with right hand [when I haven’t lost pen!!] to spread the load beteween left and right hands to reduce strain.
But I get no RSI problems when using trackpad.”
Same here. Mice induce RSI quickly but no problems with trackpads. Trackpads work fine when they’re decent (they vary greatly), setup correctly and you commit to using them. Prefer Trackpads to mice now. Also it’s handy not to have to lug a mouse around, plug it in, find a flat surface etc when moving the laptop around. Even if someone prefers the mouse it’s still not an excuse for a poorly designed trackpad of buggy drivers, it should work regardless.
Seems to be alot of people on Digg bitching about this article and shouting to use a mouse and to quit moaning. The author already said he does most of his work on a Mac Pro tower (so presumably with a mouse). And either way it doesnt negate the fact the trackpad needs work. Which is what this article about. Some people like to moan for the hell of it when someone doesnt do things their way.
SCOTT – IF YOU’RE GONNA DO AN INFORMATIVE SITE – INFORM PEOPLE. EVEN IF YOU’VE MADE THE MISTAKE LONG-TERM.
YOUR MAC BOOK PRO CAN BE EATEN ALIVE BY A PC NEARLY 1/3 ITS PRICE. WITH A BETTER WARRANTY, BETTER SOFTWARE AVAILABILITY, ETC.
STOP DELETING MESSAGES AND ACTUALLY INFORM PEOPLE
I think I would still prefer a PC over this, just way to pricey.
I have to think that your comment about the look of your glossy screen in relation to how things are going to print is you just goofing around, yes? Surely you’re calibrating your screen, yes? If not, why not?
I know that calibration and people looking at their screens to gauge what will be printed is the norm now for all you new people to color corrections and retouching. When I learned it there was no calibration. You went strictly by the CMYK numbers using your experience. You NEVER used the monitor to see if your going to have a good print. In fact, you should be able to color correct a picture using a black and white monitor if you have the experience. Yes, I understand that it’s just not done that way anymore…but having the background in it sure helps a lot.
Also to the user “More Where”, if you can show me where a better warranty than Applecare, I’ll buy it. But I doubt you’ll find one. You’re also forgetting the major factor that the any pc you buy at a 1/3 of the price (which is a lie by-the-way) doesn’t run OS X. Vista and XP are a far far cry away from OS X. Until such a time that those pc’s can run OS X, they’re not even on my radar.
Scott, I’m typing this one my new Macbook pro – and boy – this glare is really something. I am normally gloss by choice guy. I have this new MBP sitting next to a 17inch glossy high res model, and there is way more reflection. Also I agree 100% with the comment that photos look – unreal – on the screen. This is a problem as it is not synching well with what get from my current Epson 7880 color mgt workflow and not even close to standard Windows PC monitor rendition- really concerned about using this for color mgt.
Apple has some more work to do here.
I just realized that I’ve stopped using my thumb to click on my macbook pro. since i do the two finger scroll gesture wtih my middle and ring finger, my pointer now rests on the click button and my thumb off the edge. It seemed to prevent that happening when I used the new mbp’s in the apple store. Maybe that will fix your problem too.
Dude, seriously, just use a mouse for the time being. It’s faster than a trackpad in the first place anyway.
Yep, it is difficult to get use to the trackpad,
but you’ll be ok. Change isn’t always easy.
thanks from tony
Well… sorry to tell you… you don’t know how to use the trackpad… you are supposed to click with the same finger you move around the screen… maybe you should watch the tutorial on how to use this trackpad?
http://www.apple.com/macbookpro/features.html click on trackpad and watch the video… your thumb should not be the clicker. one finger.. same finger clicks. you will have to find a new way to rest your hand on your computer.
Hey buddy… get a mouse.
Aside from the (obvious) annoyances I may just have to get a new mac.
Are you for real? Get a life you weirdo! you will never be happy with anything in life you big moan bag!
I read this yesterday, and today I visited IPDUSA.com and checked the results of a picture contest they ran. How amazing and coincidental was it that I saw the picture you’re working on in your video listed as the first place winner?? The page is linked below. The picture is credited to “Tommy Maloney,” though. What gives?
http://www.ipdusa.com/And-the-Winner-is/fi-36/
Hi OJ:
I lit and shot the car, but the car is owned by Tommy Maloney, and Tommy entered it in the contest. I wrote about it here on the blog last month.
-Scott
Wow so you do your photoshop work with the track pad? I bet it only takes you a few days to touch up each photo hey?
Hi Scott.
The glossy screens are a deal breaker for me. I sure hope they keep the non-glossy screen option for the 17″.
I hope none of you are implying that Scott Kelby might not be familiar with a mouse, a blue-tooth mouse or a Wacom tablet.
Scott’s review begs the creative mind to ask the question – “must the surface of the laptop be completely flat?” Could we incorporate an ergonomic thumbrest to corral the thumb, so that the trackpad can be used more effectively?
This review can be used to improve a product so that if Scott is in a field, a crowded airport, or on a flight and he just has to photoshop something, he can comfortably and reliably use his MacBook Pro to do so.
If we would spend less time slamming complaints, and spend more time considering possibilities, more companies might come up with products that truly add value and meet the needs of the user.
Create! Innovate! Find Solutions!
Hello Scott,
Thanks much for a well-written photographer’s review.
Do you have your prints from mpix back yet? Do you have anything to report on how well the glossy display worked for color correction? And are you liking the gloss after a couple of weeks use?
Thanks again!
hello sir,
my laptop mouse is working,but finger moment is not working i touched pad i move to the finger in laptop pad but it can not working what can i do pls rectfy this problem
Hi,
Would a Mac Book (not Pro) or a PC be better for a 16 year old student who wants to become a photographer? I am trying to keep the price under control since she will be taking it to school. Would she be able to run Photoshop efficiently? She would like a Mac. I am having a hard time comparing the Mac to her sisters HP lap top with 4G, 250 GB hard drive for $650. Any suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks
Scott,
John Nack posted yesterday a plug-in disables trackpad rotation.
http://blogs.adobe.com/jnack/2009/02/optional_plugin.html
Plug-In:
http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=4337
-Brendan
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